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  • Fighting child poverty. Family day care centres in Debrecen
    244-255
    Views:
    21

    One of today's biggest challenges, present in every country in the world in some form or another, is child poverty. Vulnerable groups include children of unemployed parents, families with three or more children and single parents (Ferge and Darvas 2012).
    In the EU-27, children and working-age people are at higher risk of poverty and social exclusion than older people. The extent of child poverty is also influenced by the labour market status of parents, the household in which they grow up, and government interventions (Antuofermo and Di Meglio 2012). Since child poverty and the labour market status of parents are inseparable, in my study I also examine employment and unemployment indicators in our country.

  • Do we have the effect of poverty ethnicisation in the Biharkeresztes micro-region?
    81-92
    Views:
    23

    At a research in the Biharkeresztes micro-region (conducted via semi-structured interviews) we
    asked family households living in poverty. Roma households were mostly among the respondents.
    We also found that that estimated number of Roma population in the settlements correlated to
    the number of people working in public service. The examination of age structure diagrams at
    the settlements showed that the ones the mayors estimated to have a higher Roma population,
    are the younger settlements. The fact that there can be a causal relationship between these
    phenomena is supported by numerous previous researches (Kemény, 2004; Molnár, 2007). These
    researches pointed out the effect of poverty ethnicisation in Hungary (Ladányi – Szelényi, 2004).
    Furthermore, a research conducted in 2007 at the neighbouring Szabocs-Szatmár-Bereg County
    also confirmed the ethnicisation theory (Fónai et al.). The aim of this study is to examine the
    possibility of poverty ethnicisation at the five settlements of the Biharkeresztes micro-region,
    with the help of the implemented qualitative inquiry, previous researches, and databases from
    CSO and TeIR .

  • The situation of Hungarian minority households with children in Transcarpatia
    53-71.
    Views:
    35

    In our study, we present the situation of Hungarian minority households with children in Ukrai-nian villages based on the results of our qualitative and quantitative researches. In the explora-tory research, 23 interviews were made, and in the questionnaire, research data were obtained from a total of 139 households and 253 children. We present the poverty of households with children along the standard of living and the deprivation features of the households. The core of our analysis is the specific labor market situation, the earning opportunities,and forms of employment that provide for livelihoods for the households with children. Beside the backward-ness of the area studied in the research, the strategies and life situations that characterize the Transcarpathian Hungarians are also presented, which are beyond the known European forms of poverty.

  • Women in urban poverty in Hungary: Maids and working women in the labour market before 1945
    64-73
    Views:
    18

    A 19. század végi ipari forradalom okozta gazdasági és társadalmi átalakulás számos változást hozott Magyarországon. Az infrastruktúra és a közlekedés fejlődése lehetővé tette a nők számára, hogy új munkalehetőségekhez jussanak, elhagyják a hagyományos közösségeket és új életformákat próbáljanak ki.

    Magyarországon a cselédtartás továbbra is társadalmi szokás maradt, és még a két világháború között is sokakat érintett.

  • Rural youth and their lack of mobility
    3-22.
    Views:
    79

    International research on the lack of mobility and its causes among people in rural areas primarily focuses on motivations for emigration and consequences of immigration. In the first half of our study we summarize the findings of the research described above. We explain the relationship between poverty and lack of mobility, review the link between agriculture and local mobility, predominantly through the functions of rural businesses. We explore the return migration of youths, especially those who move back to their village after a long period of  education and/or job search. We revisit structural theories that connect migration to different types of capital and shed light on the impact of changing perceptions on rural life. We use longitudinal quantitative studies and their statistics to analyze the characteristics of the lack of mobility among Hungarian rural youths and emigration patterns between 2010–2017. The second half of our manuscript delineates the results of studies done by the Mobility Research Center of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The pertinent articles and case studies examine the role of social bonds in the lack of mobility, types of employment among rural youths, and how those influence their attachment to their village. Mobility case studies among the youths are also analyzed, along with the social representation of their identity, categories of success, the effects of poverty, their family bonds, perspectives for the future, as well as the consequences of the social and regional characteristics of their villages.

  • Limits of the relationships in the roma communities living on the margins of society in Budapest
    97-120.
    Views:
    27

    In this essay, I aim to summarize the main characteristics of the relationship structure of
    poor Roma families in Budapest. The generational changes in the relationship structure are
    illustrated by interviews and a short review of the relevant literature. In my research, I try to
    find the answer to the question, whetherthe examined segregated streets and apartment blocks
    – individually or collectively – can be called a community. And also if these segregated areas
    have a describable connection limit, if we can describe them in a geographical or social sense,
    or ifthese relationship have ethnical boundaries. I recorded my semi-structured interviews in
    the 8th and 9th district of Budapest in 2017. I interviewed twenty people from ages of sixteen to
    fifty-five. All parts of the interviews are accompanied by the related analytical and explanatory
    notes.

  • Understanding Aspects to the Ethnospecific Researches on the Gypsy Jazz
    23-39
    Views:
    30

    The early “research of Gypsies”, romology, then the visible and the hidden processes of
    “tziganology” in anthropology included a shift in the state of understanding between the
    hillside of critical interpretation studies and that of local group psychology. They also involved
    the research of folk tales, dancing, poverty, examining segregation and participatory action
    methodology as well as innovation and rebirth of the musicological research of Gypsy music.
    The terminological aspect of “us” and “others”, expressing alterity and identity, points towards
    the more complex study of (ethnic) “minorities”, moreover knowledge and field studies, and
    results of examining narratives (such as tales, dances, visual worksof art, publicity, religion and
    community), bring us closer (by way of political and scientific pragmatism) to signalling a new
    era of empathic understanding. The aim of the paper is to highlight the ways leading to that
    goal, putting the musical aspects of the shift in focus, consisting of stylistic inventions, a worldmusic-based openness towards instruments and performance cultures, which nevertheless still
    carries the signs of a new era of projection and knowledge contents, first-person-narrative and
    narrative identities. Finding answers to the question “where did it come from” might be aided
    by contemplating “where does it go”. This would be both the aim and partially the structure of
    my thematic essay.

  • The Earning and cash management characteristics of the roma communities living on the margins of society in Budapest
    110-128
    Views:
    36

    In this essay, I aim to explore the income and cash management characteristics of the roma
    communities living on the margins of society in Budapest. In my research, my main focus was the
    way people are living in the segregated streets of “Magdolna district” reacted to the declining
    opportunities after the economical system change. Another question to be answered is what
    strategies these families and households use to provide the sufficient amount of income, and if
    there is any kind of economical or ’life-management’ community function between them beyond
    the segregation.
    After reviewing the job opportunities, I concentrated on the characteristics of the consumption
    structure. I interviewed them about their costs of living as well as the possible ways of reducing
    their expences. I also tried to examine how the cooperation of extended families effect the
    everyday life of the smaller parts of these families.

  • Globalization theory of late modernity and identities in risk society
    101-121
    Views:
    29

    Modernity is the sum of the fragmented cultural systems of meaning, that are mutually influential
    on each other, plus of economic and political relations continually changing and transforming –
    a complexity that manifests itself in the structure of the (world) risk society even on the level of
    the individual. Following the late modern turn, the phenomenon of the means and opportunities
    determining the ability of choice is not being shared equally, but multiplied as regards global
    actors, as well as choice of identity, perceptibility of risks and facing them. The study presents
    the new inequality factors and the asymmetric power relations of the late modernity along the
    works by the recently died sociologists of the globalization theory (Ulrich Beck and Zygmunt
    Bauman). In the world risk society, each community and individual bear the risks indifferently.
    Accordingly, the ascertainments of the study are that the globalised economy and the subjects
    of the local poverty do not possess the same degree of the freedom of maneuvering. In order
    to demonstrate this and also to identify each postmodern life-strategy, the study relies on the
    works on identity by the discussed sociologists. According to the latter, the study concludes, that
    the reflexivity of the risk is the most profitable for those who are in the high position of the new
    inequality, thus, have the power to determine conflicts generated by them and inflict them on
    those excluded from the struggle of definition of risk.

  • The role of a children group for the participant, underprivileged children in the family care system 1995–2005
    113-135
    Views:
    20

    The aim of this paper is to analyse the methods and effects of a children group, which existed
    from 1995 till 2005. The relevance of this group is, that the beginning of this period preludes the
    constitution of the Hungarian child protection law. After the transmission period the emerging
    social service system provided (or at least tried) supports and services. Those families whose
    children were involved in this child group were dealing with unemployment, poverty, lack of
    proper housing, abuse, deviance and addictions. The significance of this group that the given
    service was easily ductile to the needs of the children and families.

  • Causes for the Lack of Mobility Among Low-Status, Impoverished Rural Youths
    134-152.
    Views:
    47

    This study explores the lack of mobility and the lack of motivation for mobility among poverty- stricken youths with low levels of education who live in small villages. I strive to find out why underprivileged young individuals stay in their local village instead of moving to areas with more abundant opportunities and employment. My manuscript also examines their family life and their relationship with their parents, and how those factors could impact their attachment to their village. The main question to analyze is whether young people stay in impoverished rural villages voluntarily or as a result of a lack of choice and a rational decision, or whether they are drifting. My analysis of the data indicates that the lack of mobility among destitute rural youths is not driven by free decisions. My results suggest that these young people belong to a drifting social group, not in charge of their own fate, unaware of the world beyond their immediate surroundings, uninformed, dependent, vulnerable, living in an environment based on mere reciprocity, and thus, in a sense, they are a marginalized social group.

  • Visibility of marginalized social groups from a network perspective
    83-108
    Views:
    177

    The study examines the segregation of different marginalized social groups – ex-prisoners, gypsies, gays and lesbians, homeless people – and their visibility in society. Using a size generator network method, the study builds negative binomial models to compare the segregation of marginalized groups within a representative sample of 1000 people. The alpha value in these models indicates the level of overdispersion. According to the results, the level of segregation varies between the overall network and the trust network. Specifically, the level of segregation for gypsies is the lowest in the overall network, whereas in the trust network, it is the lowest for gays/lesbians. The segregation of homeless people is extremely high, which is due to the fact that they are confined to their own space. Individuals with low education, belonging to lower classes, living in villages have the smallest network size. However, they have the highest number of marginalized social group members. A smaller network is associated with lower levels of peer support. The lack of weak bonds makes the social network homophilic and „island-like” social exlusions are formed where poverty and vulnerability are typical.